I don't think anybody by now seriously doubts there's such a thing as being addicted to the Internet. And now that Internet users can spend hours watching
television shows online...well, would you like some cocaine with that heroin?
But I hope the
solution being implemented in South Korea doesn't catch on in the U.S. ...
The worlds first ever boot camp for teenagers addicted to the internet may be the shape of things to come, according to experts.
The Jump Up Internet Rescue School in Mokcheon, South Korea, is similar to programmes around the world for troubled youths, providing a mix of military style, physical exercise and rehabilitation.
Inmates are pushed over assault courses and learn to ride horses, as well as being given therapy workshops on more creative pursuits such as pottery and drumming.
Concern over compulsive internet use is growing in South Korea, where 90 percent of homes have high-speed broadband connections and some online gameplayers have died from exhaustion after playing for days on end.
Fortunately, according to a September
Pew Internet survey, only 50% of U.S. Internet users have broadband in their homes, so we still have millions of dial-up users around to help us "keep it real."
Not real enough, perhaps, for the up to 9 million Americans that a psychiatrist quoted in the
Telegraph article warns could be at risk of "pathological computer use." But you can't save everybody.
I do think it's important for teens to limit their computer use and engage regularly with the non-Internet world, not only because there actually are some interesting things going on away from their computer screens, but also because there's this
national obesity epidemic you may have heard about.
Still, sending teens to "boot camps" to break their Internet habits strikes me as a solution that won't work in the long run, in large part because there's a punitive element to it. Is being forced to do push-ups or run an obstacle course going to make a teen not go online when he returns home? Are you kidding?
And while the parts about presenting alternative activities (horseback riding and drumming) seem like decent ideas, aren't those and similar activities already available in most communities?
Let's face it, the Internet boot camp is a desperation measure for parents who can't (or won't) control their children and are willing to pay someone to solve their problem. Which means you can look for one soon in the U.S.